
Samuel Helfont Draws On Extensive Research With Ba'thist Archives To Investigate The Roots Of The Religious Insurgencies That Erupted In Iraq Following The American-led Invasion In 2003. In Looking At Saddam Hussein's Policies In The 1990s, Many Have Interpreted His Support For State-sponsored Religion As Evidence Of A Dramatic Shift Away From Arab Nationalism Toward Political Islam. While Islam Did Play A Greater Role In The Regime's Symbols And Saddam's Statements In The 1990s Than It Had In Earlier Decades, The Regime's Internal Documents Challenge This Theory. The Faith Campaign Saddam Launched During This Period Was The Culmination Of A Plan To Use Religion For Political Ends, Begun Upon His Assumption Of The Iraqi Presidency In 1979. At This Time, Saddam Began Constructing The Institutional Capacity To Control And Monitor Iraqi Religious Institutions. The Resulting Authoritarian Structures Allowed Him To Employ Islamic Symbols And Rhetoric In Public Policy, But In A Controlled Manner. Saddam Ultimately Promoted A Ba'thist Interpretation Of Religion That Subordinated It To Arab Nationalism, Rather Than Depicting It As An Independent Or Primary Political Identity. The Point Of This Examination Of Iraqi History, Other Than To Correct The Current Understanding Of Saddam Hussein's Political Use Of Religion Throughout His Presidency, Is To Examine How Saddam's Controlled Use Of Religion Was Dismantled During The Us-iraq War, And Consequently Set Free Extremists That Were Suppressed Under His Regime. When The American-led Invasion Destroyed The Regime's Authoritarian Structures, It Unwittingly Unhinged The Forces That These Structures Were Designed To Contain, Creating An Atmosphere Infused With Religion, But Lacking The Checks Provided By The Former Regime. Groups Such As The Sadrists, Al-qaida, And Eventually The Islamic State Emerged Out Of This Context To Unleash The Insurgencies That Have Plagued Post-2003 Iraq.
This book investigates how Saddam Hussein utilized state-sponsored religion as a tool for political control and how the dismantling of these authoritarian structures during the 2003 invasion inadvertently facilitated the rise of religious insurgencies. Samuel Helfont, a scholar specializing in Middle Eastern security and political history, draws upon extensive analysis of captured Ba'thist archives to challenge the prevailing theory that the regime shifted toward political Islam in the 1990s. Instead, he argues that the 'Faith Campaign' was a calculated extension of long-standing efforts to subordinate religious institutions to the state's nationalist agenda. By examining internal regime documents, Helfont demonstrates that the regime maintained strict institutional control over religious expression until the collapse of its governing apparatus.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars of Middle Eastern politics highlight this work as a critical, evidence-based correction to common misconceptions regarding Saddam Hussein's ideological motivations. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's rigorous reliance on primary source documentation from the Ba'thist archives.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190843322
ISBN-13:
9780190843328
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